Memory

by Eileen Brener

Our green cottage, a small square,
chosen for distance from father’s
family, was set in a clearing.
From heaven’s view it seemed
a clear bull’s eye in a target
surrounded by a thick forest
of pines towering and dark.
We thought it belonged in a fairy tale—
the gentle kind with an unhappy
duck or a princess faint after a night
of dancing, but nothing of cannibal
stews, no shaggy shapeless creatures
who’d slip though our house’s tiny cracks
to eat all our food
or change us into lizards.

We bounded into the forest
looking for frogs to kiss or streams
full of talking fish. We left bread
crumb trails and always found
our way home.

Once we spied a raggedy man fishing.
We froze in our tracks, backed slowly
down the path.

Eileen Brener has enjoyed studying writing–poetry and prose–at the IRP.

An Etymologist Muses

Marco Polo (1254-1324) traveled through Asia for 24 years.

by Eileen Brener

My suitcase is packed—
overloaded, drooling
slivers of denim and fleece.
There’s no escaping it.
I’m “travailen”
from the Old French travailler
to suffer, torment, labor.
According to 14th century
Frenchmen, traveling
was suffering.

Go back to Vulgar
Latin via Anglo-French
for trepalliare: to torture;
           trepalium an instrument
of torture. Like Marco
Polo I must prepare
to be stranded (probably
in Atlanta), travel in endless
circles (over LaGuardia), face
constant miseries of hunger
and thirst. Next year I’ll plan
a journey: from the Old
French journee, a day trip.

Eileen Brener has enjoyed studying writing–poetry and prose–at the IRP.

In a Churchyard

by Eileen Brener

Sunday morning, feeling doleful, I drift
into a neighborhood rummage sale. There,
in front of the rooster-shaped teapot
with its four fat hen cups, salt and pepper
shakers lean and kiss, miscegenate.
The breadbox doesn’t care; it’s cozying
up to ceramic canisters. Meanwhile
a two-story dollhouse boasts blue plastic
chairs, quilted beds, open doors, perfect
maintenance: nothing mars this happy
home. . .

It breaks my heart.

Eileen Brener has enjoyed studying writing–poetry and prose–at the IRP.

I’m Mad

by Tom Ashley

I’m mad
damn mad, in fact
there’s a string hanging on my cuff
how am I going to get rid of it?
I bought this thing at Hackett
with my daughter there too
we had just come from a movie
it was something with Cary Grant
he died or something, didn’t he?
I don’t recall that movie
but my daughter ordered a trifle
and I had sticky toffee pudding
I’m sure it was at Simpson’s
and service was abominable
but if I just had scissors
I’d forgive and forget
Hackett and Simpson’s too
I’ve got to call my daughter
I think she borrowed my lawnmower

I have infinite gratitude to the fabulous Sarah White and my classmates who nurtured the imagery, passion, pleasure, emotion, insight and the gift of a lifetime I found  in poetry.

Motown

by Tom Ashley

We ruled the world, didn’t we
with our finned, chromed, candy-apple red
raked, pin-striped, dual carburetor, fuzzy diced
white walled,  spoked rim, necker knobbed
tire screeching, gas guzzling, smoking hot beasts?

We ruled the world, didn’t we
with the tuned up sounds of Wonder
Gladys and her Pips, Martha and her Vandellas
five guys named Jackson, brothers named Isley
and we had  Miracles, Spinners and Temptations
not one –  but Four Tops, Commodores and Smokey
didn’t we rule?

Then they came…the VWs, Toyotas, Hondas, Mercedes
hey, didn’t we win that war?

Our own brand of arrogance from The Big Three
the unions, the Coleman Youngs, the Kwame Kilpatricks
and wasn’t that Barry Gordy on the last train to the Coast
leaving the drugs, the murders, the destruction
of great Detroit the Beautiful?

We ruled…once

I have infinite gratitude to the fabulous Sarah White and my classmates who nurtured the imagery, passion, pleasure, emotion, insight and the gift of a lifetime I found  in poetry.